RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif./WASHINGTON, Feb 15 (Reuters) -
P resident Barack Obama has held preliminary discussions with his
team about whom to nominate to the Supreme Court, the White
House said on Monday, while accusing Senate Republicans of
"bluster" for saying they would not confirm his pick.

White House spokesman Eric Schultz told reporters
administration officials had started talking with Senate offices
about the process, which is shaping up to be an epic fight
between Republicans and Democrats in a presidential election
year.

Republicans, who control the Senate, say Obama should put
off naming a replacement for conservative Justice Antonin
Scalia, who died over the weekend, and leave it to the next
president to decide. Democrats say it is the president's
responsibility and right to make the choice.

Americans will choose a new president in the Nov. 8
elections. Obama leaves office in January 2017.

Scalia's death leaves the court evenly divided between
liberal and conservative justices just as it is set to decide
major cases on abortion, voting rights and immigration.

A growing number of Republican senators have already said
they will not support an Obama nominee, including a dozen who
are up for reelection in November. On Monday, Pat Toomey of
Pennsylvania and Rob Portman of Ohio each announced their
opposition. Both are up for reelection this year.

"This is not the first time that Republicans have come out
with a lot of bluster, only to have reality ultimately sink in,"
Schultz said, citing recent spats over raising the U.S. debt
limit and approving a nuclear deal with Iran.

"At each pass, they took a hard line. They tried to play
politics. But ultimately, they were not able to back up their
threats," Schultz said.

Republicans shrugged off the criticism, pointing to past
political battles over Supreme Court nominees. In 2006,
Democratic leaders in the Senate, as well as then-Senator Obama,
tried but failed to block President George W. Bush's nomination
of Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court, noted Don Stewart, a
spokesman for Senate Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

"Memories tend to be short around here sometimes," he said.

OBAMA STRATEGY

Obama, in California for a long-planned summit with
Southeast Asian leaders, will return to Washington on Tuesday
after a press conference at which he is sure to face questions
about his strategy for filling the Supreme Court vacancy.

David Axelrod, a former adviser to the president, said the
White House should not make an "overtly political" pick while
Republicans were behaving in a such a political manner
themselves.

"To me, it makes sense to nominate one of the stellar judges
he's already chosen who has been approved by this same Senate
that now refuses to act," Axelrod said.

One possible contender is Sri Srinivasan, who Republican
senators supported in 2013 when he was confirmed to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Schultz declined to speculate on names or strategy.

Obama will look for a nominee with "impeccable credentials"
who believes in adherence to precedent and bringing one's own
ethics and moral bearings to decisions on the court in which the
law is not clear, he said.

"The president seeks judges who understand that justice is
not about some abstract legal theory, or a footnote in a
casebook, but it is also about how our laws affect the daily
realities of peoples' lives," Schultz said.

Leaving the vacancy unfilled could affect the court both
this year and next, Schultz said, calling on the Senate to act.

"The Constitution does not include exemptions for election
years or for the president's last term in office. There's no
exemptions for when a vacancy could tip the balance of the
court," he said.